Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, April 04, 2012
Kiryas Joel's RLUIPA Case Goes Back To State Court
In November 2011, the town of Kiryas Joel, New York, (a Orthodox Jewish Hasidic enclave) and various other plaintiffs sued the nearby village of Woodbury, New York, challenging Woodbury's zoning laws under the state and federal constitutions and RLUIPA. The Hudson Valley Times Herald-Record reported on the suit at the time it was filed. The population of Kiryas Joel is increasing, and residents are looking to surrounding areas for expansion. They claim that two zoning laws adopted in 2011 by Woodbury discriminate against Hasidic Jews by limiting housing density in areas into which the Hasidic community wishes to expand. Shortly after Kiryas Joel filed its lawsuit in state court, the Village of Woodbury filed a motion to remove the case to federal court. Now, in Village of Kiryas Joel, New York v. Village of Woodbury, New York, (SDNY, March 29, 2012), the federal district court has sent the case back to state court on a technicality. For a case to be removed, all defendants must consent to removal within 30 days after the defendants receive copies of the pleadings. (28 USC Sec. 1446). Here only two of the five defendants joined in the Notice of Removal. Mid-Hudson News Network reports on the decision.